Positive outcomes for colorectal cancer treatment have been linked to early detection. The difficulty in detecting early lesions is the limited contrast with surrounding mucosa and minimal definitive markers to distinguish between hyperplastic and carcinoma lesions. Colorectal cancer is the 3rd leading cancer for incidence and mortality rates which is potentially linked to missed early lesions which allow for increased growth and metastatic potential. One potential technology for early-stage lesion detection is hyperspectral imaging. Traditionally, hyperspectral imaging uses reflectance spectroscopic data to provide a component analysis, per pixel, of an image in fields such as remote sensing, agriculture, food processing and archaeology. This work aims to acquire higher signal-to-noise fluorescence spectroscopic data, harnessing the autofluorescence of tissue, adding a hyperspectral contrast to colorectal cancer detection while maintaining spatial resolution at video-rate speeds. We have previously designed a multi-furcated LED-based spectral light source to prove this concept. Our results demonstrated that the technique is feasible, but the initial prototype has a high light transmission loss (~98%) minimizing spatial resolution and slowing video acquisition. Here, we present updated results in developing an optical ray-tracing model of light source geometries to maximize irradiance throughput for excitation-scanning hyperspectral imaging. Results show combining solid light guide branches have a compounding light loss effect, however, there is potential to minimize light loss through the use of optical claddings. This simulation data will provide the necessary metrics to verify and validate future physical optical components within the hyperspectral endoscopic system for detecting colorectal cancer.
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Excitation-scanning hyperspectral video endoscopy: enhancing the light at the end of the tunnel
Colorectal cancer is the 3rdleading cancer for incidence and mortality rates. Positive treatment outcomes have been associated with early detection; however, early stage lesions have limited contrast to surrounding mucosa. A potential technology to enhance early stagise detection is hyperspectral imaging (HSI). While HSI technologies have been previously utilized to detect colorectal cancerex vivoor post-operation, they have been difficult to employ in real-time endoscopy scenarios. Here, we describe an LED-based multifurcated light guide and spectral light source that can provide illumination for spectral imaging at frame rates necessary for video-rate endoscopy. We also present an updated light source optical ray-tracing model that resulted in further optimization and provided a ∼10X light transmission increase compared to the initial prototype. Future work will iterate simulation and benchtop testing of the hyperspectral endoscopic system to achieve the goal of video-rate spectral endoscopy.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1725937
- PAR ID:
- 10205290
- Publisher / Repository:
- Optical Society of America
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Biomedical Optics Express
- Volume:
- 12
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 2156-7085
- Format(s):
- Medium: X Size: Article No. 247
- Size(s):
- Article No. 247
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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